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Edward tells new Gurkhas they are ‘soldiers in British army but sons of Nepal’

The Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh met the two per cent of young Nepalis who passed the gruelling selection process to join the Brigade of Gurkhas.

Katie Dickinson
Friday 07 February 2025 02:50 EST
The Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh attend the attestation parade in Pokhara (Yui Mok/PA)
The Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh attend the attestation parade in Pokhara (Yui Mok/PA) (PA Wire)

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The Duke of Edinburgh told new Gurkha recruits to be proud of being a “soldier in the British army but a son of Nepal” as he attended their attestation ceremony.

Edward and his wife Sophie met the two per cent of young Nepalis who passed the gruelling and highly competitive selection process to become part of the elite Brigade of Gurkhas.

The royal couple were on the fourth day of their official tour of the Himalayan nation to celebrate its ties to the United Kingdom.

You will be living and serving a long way from home, which makes your decision even more impressive, and again, on behalf of King Charles and all the British people, we really do thank you and admire your decision

Duke of Edinburgh

The duke and duchess looked on as the 274 recruits – selected from more than 13,000 applicants – took the oath of allegiance, saluting a portrait of the King and touching the Union flag.

In a speech at the Gurkha base in Pokhara, Edward said: “Thank you for choosing to serve in the Brigade of Gurkhas in the British Army, and thank you for swearing allegiance to His Majesty today.

“You are joining a regimental family with strong traditions and a reputation for loyalty, service and courage.

“Gurkhas have served the crown for over 209 years. This now becomes your heritage and your responsibility to uphold.

“Selection, I know, has been hard and the competition very intense, but you have met the very highest standards to serve as a Gurkha and I am impressed that of the 13,000 aspiring recruits, you have made it.”

He told the recruits, who will start flying to Catterick Garrison, in North Yorkshire, from Monday: “You will be living and serving a long way from home, which makes your decision even more impressive, and again, on behalf of King Charles and all the British people, we really do thank you and admire your decision.

“Finally, always remember, you are a soldier in the British army, but you are a son of Nepal. Be proud of both.”

After the ceremony, the duke spoke with some of the young recruits and their emotional families, hearing that one family had travelled 18 hours to be there, and telling another: “You must be feeling very proud as well. He’s done very well to do this.”

Earlier, Edward and Sophie presented 38 Coronation Medals and two long service and good conduct medals to Gurkha staff on parade.

They then inspected the Band of the Brigade of Gurkhas, who played two songs by Lady Gaga as the duke and duchess inspected the ranks of new recruits, congratulating them as they went.

The couple listened from a dais as Buddhist and Hindu prayers were given before the attestation oath.

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